Showing posts with label mushroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mushroom. Show all posts

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Maryland Crab Stuffed Mushrooms


Happy Cinco De Mayo! Obviously, I'm a terrible blogger and totally forgot about it, so I don't have a Mexican fiesta planned for you today. I'll go sit in blogger time-out for a few minutes.

In the meantime, if you're still with me, you can read about something else totally delicious, if you're ok with it not being fiesta-themed!

In my previous post, I recounted our recent crab feast and what I did with a portion of the crab meat collected from our leftover crabs. While the soup used the claw meat and some of the smaller pieces of crab I collected, I saved a half pound of the best, largest chunks of meat for this next dish. I also mentioned before how I’m a crabcake snob, so I had thought about making my own with the meat I had set aside. My husband, however, doesn’t enjoy them, so I wanted to find something that we could both appreciate and eat. How about stuffing what is essentially a mini-crabcake into a baby bella mushroom? Score.


The recipe itself is straightforward enough and, again, it’s off the Cantler’s website. I soon found out, however that mushrooms are tricky little devils to balance. After realizing that no amount of steady-handedness would keep my mushrooms from tipping over onto my baking sheet, I devised a little plan to make ‘holders’ for each musroom using tinfoil. Smart, right? Well, yes and no. On some of the mushrooms, it worked fabulously. On others, they were still teetering dangerously, threatening to fall off the sheet at any moment. I pressed those down a little harder onto the foil, thinking that would solve my problems, opened the oven door and proceeded to tranfer the baking sheet from my countertop to the oven. I saw one mushroom on the corner of my pan begin to wobble. Which meant, instinctively, I cocked my wrist the opposite direction in an attempt to steady the dancing mushroom. While I successfully kept that mushroom on it’s stand, I watched, as if in slow motion, another mushroom on the other side tilt off it’s holder, roll off the baking pan and fall, splat, right onto the oven door. Crab stuffing side down.


You could hear the sizzle as soon as it made contact. So I did what any sane person would do, I scooped it all back up and shoved it back into the mushroom and put it on the pan again to bake. (And I made sure I ate that mushroom when it came time to serve!) It took everything I had not to lick up the few pieces stuck to the oven door, it was heartbreaking to have to wipe it up and toss those pieces out.


A few other mushrooms did tip over as well, but at least they stayed on the baking sheet. They tasted fantastic, but they sure weren’t the prettiest things to come out of my kitchen. That’s ok, I’ll eat them blindfolded if I have to, the taste was out of this world, and the gigantic pieces of crabmeat were so delicious, it made me forget about the pieces still stuck to my kitchen towel from cleaning up my oven.


As a note on this recipe, I didn’t make the topping because I didn’t want that much mayonnaise on my crabmeat, but I have included it in case that appeals to you. I did sprinkle with the paprika and Old Bay once they came out of the oven, though.


Maryland Crab Stuffed Mushrooms
Adapted from Cantler's (again!)

Ingredients
Crab Stuffed Mushrooms
1/2 pound Maryland backfin crab meat
3 Tbsp mayonnaise (i used Miracle Whip)
1 egg white
1 tablespoons milk
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1/2 teaspoon dry mustard
1/4 teaspoon celery salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1/8 teaspoon paprika
pinch ginger
1 tablespoons cracker meal
12 fresh mushrooms (about 2-3 inches in diameter)
For the Topping:
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1 egg white
1/8 teaspoon seafood seasoning (aka old bay)
2 dashes liquid hot pepper
paprika, for sprinkling

Directions
Remove cartilage from crab meat, being careful not to break crab lumps. Place crab meat in large bowl and set aside.

In small bowl mix mayonnaise, egg white, milk, Worcestershire sauce, mustard, celery salt, pepper, paprika and ginger.

Pour sauce over crab meat and mix gently, but thoroughly. Carefully mix in cracker meal.

Wash and remove stems from mushrooms.

Place mushrooms in a baking pan stem side up and fill each mushroom with about 2 tablespoons crab mixture.

Place in a 375 degree oven for 10 to 12 minutes or until crab meat mixture begins to brown.

If you choose to make the topping:
Mix together 1/2 cup mayonnaise, egg white, seafood seasoning and liquid hot pepper sauce.

Spread a generous amount of topping over each mushroom.
Sprinkle with paprika and bake in 375 degree oven until the topping becomes a light brown color, approximately 5 to 7 minutes.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Wild Mushroom Tartlettes

When I host a get together, I make a point to develop a menu that features food that will satisfy most appetites. While some people can subsist on brats, burgers and hot dogs alone, I can’t. I have to have lighter options to pair with the heavier foods, or else by the end of the party, I feel so bogged down by the weight of what I’ve eaten that I nearly have to roll out of the door. I also try to keep in mind that not everyone eats meat, so I try to have delicious vegetarian options that give non-meat eaters something on the menu that is more substantial than chips and salsa.

These tartlettes were a hit as an appetizer with both the vegetarians and carnivores alike. The mushrooms made these babies substantial, and the prepacked fillo shells made them a snap to assemble. I made the filling the night before the party, so all I had to do was fill the shells and heat them up the next day. Perfect when you want to spend your time with your guests, instead of in the kitchen.

If you wanted to add meat to this dish, a nice touch might be to fry up a couple pieces of bacon in a pan, remove and crumble up the bacon, and cook the mushrooms in the bacon fat, instead of using the better called for in the recipe. Then just add the crumbled bacon in with the mushrooms and serve. That would definitely kick it up a notch.


Wild Mushroom Tartlets Recipe (halved recipe)
By Woman's Day Kitchen from Woman's Day

Recipe Ingredients
1 T bsp butter
3 Tbsp chopped shallots
8 oz sliced assorted wild mushrooms, roughly chopped (8 oz – crimini, shitake, baby bellas and button mushrooms)
2 T bsp dry sherry, white wine or water
1 tsp chopped fresh thyme leaves
Pinch each salt and pepper
2 Tbsp reduced-fat cream cheese
15 mini–fillo shells (I used Athens Brand)
Garnish: small thyme sprigs


Recipe Preparation
1. Heat oven to 350ºF. Melt butter in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add shallots; cover and cook 3 minutes until softened.

2. Stir in mushrooms. Sauté 5 minutes or until tender. Stir in sherry, thyme, salt and pepper until mixture simmers. Simmer 1 minute. Stir in cream cheese until melted.

3. Fill each fillo cup with 1 Tbsp mushrooms. Place on baking sheet. Heat about 5 minutes to heat cups.

Tip: The mushroom filling can be made a day ahead and reheated in the microwave (you may need to stir in a Tbsp or so of water if mixture seems too thick). To have the tartlets ready to bake, fill them up to 2 hours ahead.
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